"We work with over 700 retailors throughout the state to encourage them to offer healthy options for families in low income neighborhoods," she says.

According to Melendrez, research shows that engaging a community is the best way to teach healthy habits. Here, that includes featuring healthy recipes with a Latin lineage.

"Today we are featuring egg and nopales – eggs and cactus," Melendrez says. "So, how can you still eat what you're used to, you know, it's your tradition, but how can you make it healthy and then how can you make it available in your neighborhood?"

"They are incorporating it in a way that is healthy, but it still keeps with a lot of the traditions."

City Council's David Alvarez grew up here, and he says the new Northgate market can have a huge impact on the neighborhood's waistlines.

"The next step, once you have access to the appropriate types of foods, and groceries and fruits and vegetables, is how do you incorporate that into your daily life and into your diet?" he says.

Encouraging consumption of healthy food could also provide an economic kick for the state's farmers. Studies show if everyone eats their fruits and veggies, that would pump 360 million dollars into the state's economy.

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